1,721,709 research outputs found

    18. Pernigotti (S.), Capasso (M.), Bakchias. Una città del deserto egiziano che torna a vivere

    No full text
    Fournet Jean-Luc. 18. Pernigotti (S.), Capasso (M.), Bakchias. Una città del deserto egiziano che torna a vivere. In: Revue des Études Grecques, tome 109, Juillet-décembre 1996. p. 739

    L’enigma della provenienza dei manoscritti Freer e dei codici cristiani viennesi alla luce dei nuovi scavi a Soknopaiou Nesos

    No full text
    The article outlines the complex story of the discovery and sale of the 4 famous Biblical codices of the Freer Collection. According to Ali Arabi, a trader of Egyptian Antiquities, who lived in Gizeh, they were found at Dime es Seba, the ancient Soknopaiou Nesos in the Fayyum region, by a clandestine digger. This statement has been very much discussed. The article comes to the conclusion that the codices could come from Dime es Seba, where probably a monastery or a hermitage was settled

    Pubblicazioni del Centro di Studi Papirologici dell'Università del Salento (1992-2019).

    No full text
    Elenco, per categorie, delel pubblicazioni prodotte dal Centro di Studi Papirologici dal 1992 al 2019

    Tradurre, mediare, perdere, tradire

    No full text
    Alcune riflessioni sulla storia della traduzion

    12. Testo grammaticale (?)

    No full text
    Edizione critica di un papiro letterario inedito di argomento grammaticale

    Tre Meduse nel Fayyum

    No full text
    Three objects from Fayyum that present the face of Medusa. They prove the popularity of Medusa myth in the graeco-roman Egypt

    Quattro papiri magici figurati

    No full text
    Analisi di quattro rotoli-amuleti figurati, aventi funzioni apotropaiche

    Scene da un Giardino: la memoria in Epicuro e nell'Epicureismo

    No full text
    Il contributo si sofferma sull'importanza della memoria nella filosofia epicurea

    IR, imperialism, and the Global South: From Libya to Venezuela

    No full text
    This article brings together two cases to contribute to the growing body of literature rethinking the study of international relations (IR) and the Global South: The Libyan Arab al-Jamāhīrīyah and the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. Drawing on media representations and secondary literature from IR and international political economy (IPE), it critically examines three main conceptual theses (authoritarian, rentier, and rogue) used to describe the historical socio-political formations of these states up to this date. Mixing oil abundance with authoritarian revolutionary fervour and foreign policy adventurism, Libya and Venezuela have been progressively reduced to the figure of one man, while presenting their current crises as localized processes delinked from the imperialist inter-state system. The article argues that these analyses, if left unquestioned, perpetuate a US-led imperial ordering of the world, while foreclosing and discrediting alternatives to capitalist development emerging from and grounded in a Global South context. In doing so, the article contributes to the growing and controversial debate on the meanings and needs for decolonizing the study of IR
    corecore